Add to New Assignment

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You can also find Assignments under your account dropdown in the upper right hand corner.

This new site feature allows users to choose from our hundreds of engaging learning
games and exercises to create assignments for students. See below for details and simple
instructions on how to use this exciting new feature.

How to Assign Games or Exercises

You've selected a game or exercise to assign.

From here, you have two options: Add the game or exercise to a new assignment, or add to an existing assignment.

If you're creating a new assignment, give it a name. Adding a description or due date is optional. Click "Next".

Select the child(ren) you want to send this assignment to, then click "Done". You will see a confirmation message once it has been successfully assigned.

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Your students can log in through your Pro membership log-in, or at learn.education.com by entering the Classroom Mode code.

Once your child selects their profile, they will land on our main menu where they will see available assignments and due dates (if applicable).

To complete the assignments, students click on the games or exercises listed on the assignment page, play, learn, and have fun!

The main menu also allows students to see their progress in each individual game and exercise in the assignment.

Track Assignment Progress

As your child completes each assignment, you'll be able to track their performance
in the Assignments tab of our Progress Tracker. You'll also be able to make edits
to assignments from here, like removing games or exercises, or changing the due date.

Want to learn a little more about a few select presidents this February? Climb the presidential heights of Mt. Rushmore with this Mt. Rushmore writing activity that gets your child up close and personal with four of our country’s greatest leaders.

What You Need:

Unlined white paper

Pencil

Pens

Scissors

Glue stick

Lined paper

Internet access

What You Do:

Have your child look at the official website for Mt. Rushmore National Memorial. He will learn that the giant sculptures are of former U.S. presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt, and that the carvings were completed in 1941. He will also see photos of the monument.

Have your child take the unlined sheet of white paper and lay it so that it is horizontal.

Have your child fold the sheet into four equal sections. Leave the sheet folded.

Give your child a pencil to draw an outline of a head-and-shoulder shape on the front of the folded paper.

Next let him cut out the shape with scissors, through all of the folded paper.

When he unfolds the paper, he should have four head/shoulder shapes attached (like paper doll chains) to represent Mt. Rushmore.

Next, he can use the Internet to research some facts about each president. He can write each president’s name and one or two facts about that president under each silhouette shape. If there is not enough room on the white paper, he can cut small pieces of lined paper to glue underneath each picture and write his facts there.

Ask your child to think about the presidents that came after Theodore Roosevelt, and imagine that a later president will be added to Mt. Rushmore. Which president would he pick and why? Let him write his idea and argument on a sheet of lined paper—it’s not yet “set in stone”!